LOCATION: In northwest Mission on West
18th Street at North Holland Avenue.

SURVEYED: Partial (from family records), 2006

HISTORY: Laurel Hill Cemetery was established around
1908. City founder John J. Conway donated approximately 11 acres for the
cemetery. According to city legend, when Ed Dawson died and the need for a
cemetery arose, John C. Conway selected the spot with a pistol shot to the land
plot map. The incident is documented in Cleo Dawson’s 1943 fictionalized history
of Mission, She Came to the Valley (p331).

In 1906, Minnesotans John J. Conway and James W. Hoit
opened the first land office in Hidalgo County and founded Mission in 1907. By
1908, there was a frame railroad depot, pumping station with three miles of
canals, a restaurant, post office, lumberyard, saloon, and Dawson’s El Caballo
Blanco store. Mission was incorporated in 1908.

In the 1920s or 1930s, Charlie Langston, longtime
director of Public Works for the City of Mission, planted hundreds of live oak
trees to shade Laurel Hill Cemetery. (There are no Texas mountain laurel trees,
with the purple blossoms that smell like grape bubble gum, on the grounds.) The
cemetery originally had separate Catholic and Protestant sections.

City pioneer Rich Hansen had the cemetery fenced, and
installed irrigation and a sprinkler system. He raised $35,000 for care of the
cemetery. There are a number of above-ground crypts, including the Hansen family
mausoleum built in 1950.

The Parks and Recreation Department of the City of
Mission provides maintenance. A city-appointed Cemetery (or Parks ?) Board
oversees operations and maintains records. All burial plots were sold prior to
2006.